NIPA (Nuclear Interaction Partner of ALK) Is Crucial for Effective NPM-ALK Mediated Lymphomagenesis

  • Stefanie Kreutmair
  • Lena Johanna Lippert
  • Cathrin Klingeberg
  • Corinna Albers-Leischner
  • Salome Yacob
  • Valeria Shlyakhto
  • Tony Mueller
  • Alina Mueller-Rudorf
  • Chuanjiang Yu
  • Sivahari Prasad Gorantla
  • Cornelius Miething
  • Justus Duyster
  • Anna Lena Illert

Related Research units

Abstract

The NPM-ALK fusion kinase is expressed in 60% of systemic anaplastic large-cell lymphomas (ALCL). A Nuclear Interaction Partner of ALK (NIPA) was identified as a binding partner of NPM-ALK. To identify the precise role of NIPA for NPM-ALK-driven lymphomagenesis, we investigated various NPM-ALK+ cell lines and mouse models. Nipa deletion in primary mouse embryonic fibroblasts resulted in reduced transformation ability and colony formation upon NPM-ALK expression. Downregulating NIPA in murine NPM-ALK+ Ba/F3 and human ALCL cells decreased their proliferation ability and demonstrated synergistic effects of ALK inhibition and NIPA knockdown. Comprehensive in vivo analyses using short- and long-latency transplantation mouse models with NPM-ALK+ bone marrow (BM) revealed that Nipa deletion inhibited NPM-ALK-induced tumorigenesis with prolonged survival and reduced spleen colonies. To avoid off-target effects, we combined Nipa deletion and NPM-ALK expression exclusively in T cells using a lineage-restricted murine ALCL-like model resembling human disease: control mice died from neoplastic T-cell infiltration, whereas mice transplanted with Lck-CreTG/wtNipaflox/flox NPM-ALK+ BM showed significantly prolonged survival. Immunophenotypic analyses indicated a characteristic ALCL-like phenotype in all recipients but revealed fewer "stem-cell-like" features of Nipa-deficient lymphomas compared to controls. Our results identify NIPA as a crucial player in effective NPM-ALK-driven ALCL-like disease in clinically relevant murine and cell-based models.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article number875117
ISSN2234-943X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 13.05.2022

Comment Deanary

Copyright © 2022 Kreutmair, Lippert, Klingeberg, Albers-Leischner, Yacob, Shlyakhto, Mueller, Mueller-Rudorf, Yu, Gorantla, Miething, Duyster and Illert.

PubMed 35646639